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Zorro

  • TV Series
  • 1957–1959
  • TV-G
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
4.7K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,496
1,424
Guy Williams in Zorro (1957)
Clip: War - 1:41
Play clip1:42
Watch Zorro
13 Videos
99+ Photos
SuperheroSwashbucklerAdventureDramaFamilyWestern

Don Diego de la Vega opposes the corrupt tyrants of Spanish California as the masked swordsman, Zorro.Don Diego de la Vega opposes the corrupt tyrants of Spanish California as the masked swordsman, Zorro.Don Diego de la Vega opposes the corrupt tyrants of Spanish California as the masked swordsman, Zorro.

  • Stars
    • Guy Williams
    • Gene Sheldon
    • Henry Calvin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    4.7K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,496
    1,424
    • Stars
      • Guy Williams
      • Gene Sheldon
      • Henry Calvin
    • 33User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes82

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    Videos13

    Zorro
    Clip 1:42
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    Photos190

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Guy Williams
    Guy Williams
    • Don Diego de la Vega…
    • 1957–1961
    Gene Sheldon
    Gene Sheldon
    • Bernardo
    • 1957–1961
    Henry Calvin
    Henry Calvin
    • Sgt. Demetrio Lopez Garcia…
    • 1957–1961
    Don Diamond
    Don Diamond
    • Corp. Reyes…
    • 1957–1959
    George J. Lewis
    George J. Lewis
    • Don Alejandro de la Vega…
    • 1957–1961
    Nestor Paiva
    Nestor Paiva
    • Teo Gonzales…
    • 1957–1961
    Britt Lomond
    Britt Lomond
    • Capitán Monastario…
    • 1957–1958
    Vinton Hayworth
    Vinton Hayworth
    • Magistrado Carlos Galindo
    • 1958
    Jolene Brand
    Jolene Brand
    • Anna Maria Verdugo
    • 1958–1959
    Suzanne Lloyd
    Suzanne Lloyd
    • Raquel Toledano…
    • 1958–1961
    Jan Arvan
    Jan Arvan
    • Nacho Torres…
    • 1957
    John Litel
    John Litel
    • The Governor
    • 1958–1959
    Than Wyenn
    • Licenciado Piña
    • 1957–1958
    Romney Brent
    Romney Brent
    • Padre Felipe
    • 1957
    Charles Korvin
    Charles Korvin
    • Jose Sebastian Varga 'The Eagle'
    • 1958
    Eduard Franz
    Eduard Franz
    • Gregorio Verdugo
    • 1958
    Carlos Romero
    Carlos Romero
    • Romero Serrano…
    • 1958–1961
    Henry Wills
    Henry Wills
    • Castro…
    • 1958
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    8.24.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8abolfazlabdi

    I do agree that Guy Williams version is the best along with the other two pivotal characters of Bernardo and Sgt Garcia being unique

    Considering my age, I watched the series quite late. Having heard a lot about these series from my older sisters and friends, I decided to watch them all. I bought the whole series on DVD (total of 78 X 30 min and 4 X 60 min) in summer 2006 and watched the whole 83 hours in around a month.

    Having watched 3 other Zorro versions, I do agree that Guy Williams version is the best along with the other two pivotal characters of Bernardo and Sgt Garcia being unique. Considering the fact that I am in 2006 and still enjoining these series, I tried to imagine how enjoyable these series were for the peoples of 50's!!!
    9Grant_Gardner

    If blessed with a family, I look forward to watching these with them.

    Thought I'd add my two cents. Along with Johnny Weismuller as Tarzan, Larry Buster Crabbe as Flash Gordon, Guy Williams is Zorro for me. He wasn't the first Zorro I saw in action, but after his, it is hard for me to watch some of the others. I believe he had a lot of potential and in the hands of the two directors he worked with, and the fencing master, they really brought a lot to the scripts and performance. Along with a wonderfully fleshed out supporting cast. I was also surprised to find Albert Whitlock's name in some of the end credits. He's the famous matte painter who has also work on many of Hitchcock's films. Also the stunt work for some of the episodes is quite impressive for a TV show, more of what I would expect to see in a feature film at that time.

    I just bought the complete first season on DVD and I am surprised how much in tune my opinions are with the many positive things written about the show here already. If I'm ever blessed with a family, I truly look forward to watching these, along with Johnny's Tarzan, Buster's Flash and Clayton Moore's Lone Ranger with them. I have had the opportunity to watch a couple of the silent Super 8mm black and white films from the Zorro show with some kids I baby sat. If their reaction is any indication as to how my own family will enjoy and respond to watching these colorized versions on DVD, the experience will surely be a real treat for all of us.
    silverscreen888

    Sincere, well-made B/W adventure; The Scarlet Pimpernel" of Spanish California

    "Zorro" was a character created in the image of others of the 19th century who had worn a disguise, played a dual role, championed justice for people against those who would deprive them of it or rob them through excessive taxes and deny them justice under courts. Johnston McCulley's character returned home in 1820, after attending a university in Spain, to find the land being ruled by a tyrannical commandante. Instead of committing suicide through a premature rebellion, Don Diego instead masquerades as a foppish coward by day--like the Scarlet Pimpernel--and by night becomes El Zorro, the black-clad fox. He is no altruist; his purpose is to steal back what the tyrant's soldiers have stolen, to save those condemned falsely and to instill a spirit of revolution against their oppressor in his people. McCulley apparently liked the television version much better than the film that had starred Tyrone Power; I too prefer it to that film as author and actor, and to the later versions. Producer Norman Foster and Walt Disney labored to make the production, albeit an adventure series, a quality offering, much as the British "Robin Hood" of Hannah Weinstein became a classic for the same reasons. As Diego de la Vega, Guy Williams, actually Hispanic, was a charismatic, attractive and capable "B" leading man in the role of a lifetime; he had the capability of playing comedy as well as drama and was made to seem a superb fencer. Henry Calvin played the slow-witted but practical Sergeant Garcia, Gene Sheldon was his mute servant and helper Bernardo, who also played the banjo. George J. Lewis, also Hispanic, was attractive as Don Alejandro, Diego's father; the part of Captain Monastario was played with some power by Britt Lomond; many other semi-regulars populated the series including Don Diamond, Jan Arvan, Jolene Brand, Nestor Paiva, Romney Brent, John Litel, Vinton Hayworth, Eduard Franz and Eugenia Paul. Others often seen in the series included regular guests Suzanne Lloyd Charles Korvin, Carlos Romero, Jay Novello and Michael Pate. Directors for the series included Charles Lamont, Harmon Jones, William Witney, John Meredyth Lucas, Norman Foster, Lewis R. Foster, Hollingsworth Morse, Charles Barton and Robert Stevenson. Among sixteen writers who contributed to the series' several; formats were Gene L. Coon, Roy Edward Disney, Anthony Ellis, Jackson Gillis, Lewis R. Foster, Norman Foster and N. B. Stone, Jr. George Avil supplied good B/W cinematography; Production Designer was Marvin Aubrey Davis aided by Set Decoratos Hal Gausman and Emile Kuri; Chuck Keehne supplied the attractive period costumes. Fred Cavens performed the vital job of fencing master. The theme song became as famous as the series did. This same show might have been done as drama; but as an adventure with sincerity, emotional honesty and good production values, it would be hard to better. The series appeared only from 1957 to 1959.
    Jill-30

    An all-time favorite of children's television

    It is 1820 and a ship approaches the coast of Spanish California with young Don Diego de la Vega returning to his father's hacienda in the pueblo of Los Angeles. Recalled home after 3 years at University in Spain, Diego learns from the Capitan that the trouble his father hinted at in his letters is due to the political oppression of the new Commandante, Capitan Monastario. Realizing that he cannot hope to fight the soldiers as himself, Diego decides that "if one cannot wear the skin of the lion, put on that of the fox." By day he will appear to be a lazy, bookish, pacifist dandy. By night he will don the black clothes, a cape, and a mask and become the "Friend of the People", El Zorro, the Fox.

    Although "Zorro" aired in the early days of television in B&W, it retains a fresh, modern quality, especially in the colorized version. In one half-hour show we get plot, action, comedy, drama, music, and even Spanish dancing. Everything was done under the guidance of Walt Disney and director Norman Foster with attention to detail, high production values, and Spanish flavor. The cast was wonderful, especially Henry Calvin as Sgt. Garcia, Gene Sheldon as the "deaf"-mute servant, Bernardo, George L. Lewis as Don Alejandro, Don Diamond as Cpl. Reyes, and co-star Britt Lomond as the evil Capitan Monastario. The author and inventor of Zorro, Johnston McCulley felt that the pages of his books had come to life in this show. Guy Williams, in the dual role of Diego/Zorro will never be surpassed as either. He remains for a generation of Babyboomers the real Zorro.

    "Zorro" airs nightly on the Disney Channel. The 78 episodes are shown alternately all in B&W and then again in the colorized version. Even today it remains my favorite program on television.
    Tango2200

    Walt Disney's ZORRO!!!--STARRING GUY WILLIAMS!!!

    What if an actor was tall, dark, and handsome? And what if the actor had learned to act in bit parts in movies with actors like Tyrone Power, Victor Mature, and Raymond Massey? And what if the actor could handle a sword???

    It all adds up to Walt Disney's ZORRO!!!--STARRING GUY WILLIAMS!!! Guy Williams as both Zorro and alter ego Don Diego De La Vega is better than all the actors who played the role before and after him, taller than Tyrone Power, better looking than Douglas Fairbanks, and taller, better looking, and better with a sword than Antonio Banderas!

    Walt Disney controlled every aspect of this 1950s black and white tv show--the black and white photography is the show's greatest weakness, and the new colorized versions on the Disney Channel are much better--and the result is an interesting departure from the standard 1950s westerns, with humor, adventure, and terrific sets and casting. Henry Calvin is sensational as Williams' chief foil, Sargent Garcia, and Gene Sheldon is very good as Williams' mute servant Bernardo. But it's Guy Williams, with his beautiful hair, his handsome face, his height, his well proportioned physique, and something about the way he walks, the way he talks, and some strange quality that he had--see Guy in CAPTAIN SINBAD!!!--some ability to convey to his audience, "Everything's going to be all right!!!"--that made Walt Disney's ZORRO the best ZORRO of all!

    THERE WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER GUY WILLIAMS!!!

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During the two year lawsuit between Disney and ABC that halted the series production, Disney kept Guy Williams on full salary.
    • Goofs
      The "avisos" or "Wanted" posters invariably announce the reward in "pesos". Although this brings to memory the post-independence Mexican peso, the name "peso" ("peso duro", etc) was used for centuries in the Spanish colonies for the Spanish Real or "piece-of-eight", and California was not an exception.
    • Quotes

      Garcia: [to Cpl. Reyes] The next time I want some idiot to guard a prisoner, I shall do it myself!

    • Alternate versions
      Also available in a computer colorized version.
    • Connections
      Edited into Signé Zorro (1958)
    • Soundtracks
      Theme from Zorro
      Music by George Bruns

      Lyrics by Norman Foster

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 7, 1965 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El Zorro
    • Filming locations
      • Old Tucson - 201 S. Kinney Road, Tucson, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Walt Disney Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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